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TYPICAL GROUND BEETLES
CARABIDAE: HARPALINAE
CARABIDAE: HARPALINAE
subfamily
Harpalinae
known species
19,000
distribution
Worldwide except Antarctica, especially
in the tropics, but also reaching into the
Arctic Circle
habitat
Almost every habitat, from subterranean
caves to the forest canopy
size
2–100 mm
diet
Almost all predators, though there are a few
subgroups that are mainly seed feeders
notes
Some Harpalinae, for example in the tribe
Lebiini, are parasitic as larvae, an unusual
habit among beetles. In southern Africa,
especially in the Kalahari Desert, the
harpaline genus Lebistina is an ectoparasite
T
he huge and diverse subfamily Harpalinae
accounts for almost half of the family
Carabidae. Most people’s view of a “typical beetle”
is probably one of these. The subfamily shows
some of the widest ranges of habits and habitats
of any beetle group, but with a strong tendency
toward predation. Some species are specific
predators, attacking, for example, mainly snails,
worms, or particular caterpillars, while others
are generalists and will eat anything they can
overpower. In northern Europe and North
America, members of the genera Pterostichus and
Abax, large, black typical ground beetles may
exist in enormous numbers on agricultural land,
and some farmers will set aside small areas of
uncultivated land along their crops as “beetle
banks” to encourage these voracious and generalist
predators to control slugs, snails, and larvae of pest
insects in crops.
While most Harpalinae are beneficial, a few
species are less welcome in crop fields—for example,
the Strawberry Beetle (Harpalus rufipes) can be a
pest of soft fruit by eating the achenes (external
seeds) from growing strawberries, spoiling their
left | Craspedophorus
(tribe Panagaeini)
A large nocturnal
predator from
Thailand. Many
Carabidae are black
with four distinctive
red or orange spots.
opposite above |
Mormolyce phyllodes
(tribe Lebiini)
A Guitar or Violin
Beetle from Southeast
Asia. The largest
Harpalinae, at 4 in
(10 cm), it lives among
giant fungi.